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Class issues in the French presidential election
By the Editorial Board
4 May 2007
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The French presidential election, which goes into its second
and final round this Sunday, is dominated by a deliberate campaign
to block any expression of the independent political interests
and struggle of the working class.
This is what lies behind the claim that the contest between
Ségolène Royal and Nicolas Sarkozy represents a
choice between two very diametrically opposed political models.
An atmosphere of hysteria is being whipped up, as if France were
immediately threatened with a fascist seizure of power should
Sarkozy enter the Elysée palace. This hysteria is aimed
at suppressing any critical reflection on the causes of the current
situation and the consequences of an election victory for Royal.
In reality, the working population has been left without a
choice in this election. It signifies the end result of the decades-long
decline of the official workers movement. The differences
between Royal and Sarkozy are tactical, not fundamental. Irrespective
of who emerges as victor on Sunday evening, the election augurs
a profound lurch to the right and violent class confrontations
in the near future. The working class can prepare for such confrontations
only by developing its own independent, socialist politics.
What does Royal stand for?
Royal and Sarkozy are in agreement with the heads of big business
that France requires a fundamental change of political course.
They have no dispute about the necessity for this course, merely
over the best methods to implement it. As the German news magazine
Der Spiegel accurately noted, They may put forward
different proposals in their programs, but both are united in
the fundamental analysis: that France in 2007 is a country in
crisis.
Economic growth is below the European average, the foreign
trade balance shows a 30 billion Euro deficit, national debt has
more than doubled in the last 15 years, the ratio of government
outlays to GDP is the second highest in Europe at 54 percent,
while one in twelve citizens is employed in the public sector.
Big business is demanding the streamlining of the state budget,
the dismantling of public service jobs, the privatisation of state-owned
enterprises, cuts in pensions and social security benefits and
the growth of the low-wage sector. But attempts to implement such
policies have repeatedly met with bitter resistance during the
past twelve years.
A series of major strikes have paralysed the country for weeks
at a time. The Gaullist head of government, Alain Juppé,
faced such a situation in 1996. In 2002, his Socialist Party successor,
Lionel Jospin, who carried out more denationalisations than his
three right-wing predecessors combined, was hammered in the presidential
elections, losing out to the extreme rightist Jean Marie Le Pen.
Three years later the French population rejected the European
constitution in what was a resounding rebuff to the entire political
establishment. Again last year, students and young workers took
to the streets in huge protests lasting for weeks to force the
withdrawal of the despised First Job Contract (CPE).
Sarkozy and Royal agree that this situation is untenable and
has to be changed. Sarkozy is intent on using the methods of intimidation
and confrontation. He has whipped up xenophobic fears and exploited
the issue of crime to pose as the hard man, who can
take tough action. Royal considers such a strategy to be too risky.
She promises to achieve the same goals as Sarkozy without risking
confrontation. She invokes a France of harmony based
upon on co-operation with the social partners, i.e.,
the trade unions and business associations. She is walking in
the political footsteps of such figures as Tony Blair, Gerhard
Schröder and Romano Prodi, who all proved to be far more
effective reformers than many of their conservative
colleagues.
Behind Royals social rhetoric lurks the vision of an
authoritarian France. For example, she calls for locking up juvenile
delinquents or handing them over to the army for training. Her
few social promisesan increase in the minimum wage, more
money for education and jobs for young peopleare merely
bait to attract voters. She will ditch such promises as rapidly
as her role model and mentor François Mitterrand did following
his election as president in 1981, when the international financial
markets demanded he jettison reformism in favour of austerity.
Royal shifted even further to the right after the first round
of the election ten days ago. She is intent on building an alliance
with the right-wing bourgeois UDF and has suggested that UDF leader
François Bayrou could fill the post of prime minister in
a Royal-led government. She announced that as president she would
stand above all social classes and would not be bound to any party.
This represents a clear threat to anyone who dares to step out
of line and disturb social harmony.
Why Le Pen calls for abstention
The petty-bourgeois radicals of the so-called extreme left
are the most energetic in calling for a Royal vote.
Barely had the polling stations closed on April 22, and Olivier
Besancenot of the Revolutionary Communist League (Ligue Communiste
Révolutionnaire), Arlette Laguiller of Workers Struggle
(Lutte Ouvrière), José Bové (Alter-mondialists),
Marie-George Buffet (Communist Party) and Dominique Voynet (the
Greens) united in calling for a vote for Royal in the second round.
None of them posed any demands or even raised any questions before
throwing their support to Royal. Together they had achieved a
combined vote of over ten percent of the electorateBesancenot
alone won one and a half million votesbut, nevertheless,
they are supporting Royal without any conditions.
Their slogan, Anybody but Sarkozy, is aimed at
intimidating anyone who is not prepared to follow Royal and is
seeking an independent political orientation. The Green, Noel
Mamère, was most explicit when he justified his participation
in an election meeting for Royal with the words, With the
prospect of a coalition between Sarkozy and Le Pen, the house
is burning. This is not the time to ask questions.
In reality, there is absolutely no basis for the argument that
a victory for Royal would serve to undermine the influence of
Le Pen, and the leader of the National Front is very well aware
of this. He has called for abstention in the second round, which,
bearing in mind the closeness of his voters to Sarkozys
camp, can only be interpreted as backhanded support for Royal.
Anyone with some understanding of French history knows that
the growth of the National Front is a direct consequence of widespread
demoralization and disillusionment created by the right-wing policies
of the Socialist and Communist Parties. A number of the current
strongholds of the National Front were former centres of influence
of the French Communist Party.
It was the reactionary policies of Mitterrand and Jospin, together
with the servile support of the Stalinist Communist Party, which
has allowed Le Pen to exploit social tensions to advance his own
reactionary agenda. It is a fact that the chauvinist agitation
against immigrantswhich is at the heart of National Front
policywas first initiated by the Stalinists. In 1981 Robert
Hue, who was later to become Secretary-General of the FCP, headed
a racist mob that besieged the home of a Moroccan immigrant family
in Montigny-les-Cormeilles.
Jean Marie Le Pens share of the vote rose rapidly to
15 percent during the presidency of François Mitterrand.
In 2002 following the period anti-working class policies pursued
by the government of Lionel Jospin, Le Pen recorded the biggest
success of his political career with his entry into the second
round of the presidential elections. Should Royal take over as
president, the National Front can count on a new lease on life.
The party thrives on and exploits the demoralization that invariably
results from the betrayals of the Socialist Party.
Whoever understands the calculus of politics will comprehend
this; only the frightened reformists of the LCR and LO with their
petty calculations about gaining influence in a Socialist government
hope that Royal will prevent the worst and cling to her
coattails.
What has strengthened Sarkozy?
Sarkozy is also a product of the disastrous policy of voting
for the lesser evil, which invariably results in the emergence
of an even greater evil. This pompous, obsessively ambitious and
often inept careerist draws his strength from the absence of any
independent working class policy. A bold political offensive would
rapidly cut him down to size.
Five years ago the petty bourgeois radicals reacted to the
defeat of Lionel Jospin by calling for a vote for Jacques Chirac
in order, as they claimed, to stop Le Pen. They thereby played
a major role in the triumphant victory of Chiraca thoroughly
discredited Gaullist, who failed to gain the support of even a
fifth of the electorate in the first round. Chirac then lost no
time in uniting the diffuse right wing to form the UMP, which
has now become the launching pad for the presidential ambitions
of Monsieur Sarkozy.
Now Besancenot and Laguiller declare that French working people
must elect Royal, in order to stop Sarkozy, while claiming that
later they can oppose her on the streets. This, however, is a
lie. If it is necessary to support Royal against Sarkozy today,
then it will be a thousand times more necessary tomorrow, when
the right wing threatens sharp attacks to unseat her. Support
for Royal at the ballot box excludes any serious mobilization
that rises above purely symbolic protest.
Ample proof of this political reality can be found in Italy.
There, a party that has long served as a role model for the French
petty-bourgeois radicals, Communist Refoundation (Rifondazione
Comunista), has supported bourgeois governments for years on the
basis of stopping the right-wing forces assembled around Silvio
Berlusconi and Gianfranco Fini. Today, Communist Refoundation
sits in the Italian government, tacitly or openly supporting social
cuts and international missions by the Italian army, and attacks
anybody who opposes such policiesall in the name of the
struggle against the right.
The policy of Rifondazione has politically disarmed and demoralized
the working class. It has created conditions whereby Silvio Berlusconia
man who has been driven out of office on two occasions and has
one foot in a prison cellnow has a good chance of taking
a third bite of power. At the same time the neo-fascist Gianfranco
Fini is regarded as the up-and-coming figure in Italian politics.
Opportunismthe lessons of French history
There is a proverb in France: Plus ça change,
plus c'est la même chosethe more things
change, the more they remain the same. The arguments now
being used by the petty bourgeois radicals to drum up support
for Royal are by no means original.
In 1899, using the argument of defending the Republic against
the right and the anti-Semitic opponents of Dreyfus, Alexandre
Millerand became the first socialist to enter the French government.
At the time, Millerands actions attracted international
attention. It was in a certain sense the original sin of opportunism.
For the first time in history a socialist had joined a government
representing the capitalist ruling class.
The revolutionary Marxist Rosa Luxembourg graphically described
the consequences of this step in her article, The socialist
crisis in France She wrote, The Republic is in danger!
That is why it was necessary for a socialist to become the bourgeois
Minister of Commerce. The Republic is in danger! That is why the
socialist had to remain in the cabinet even after the massacre
of the striking workers on the Island of Martinique and in Chalon.
The Republic is in danger! As a result, inquiries into the massacres
had to be blocked, the parliamentary investigations of the horrors
perpetrated in the colonies had to be discarded, and the amnesty
law accepted. All acts of the government, all positions and votes
of the socialists are based upon a concern for the threatened
Republic and its defence.
These words, written more than a hundred years ago, have lost
none of their veracity. The opportunism espoused by Millerand
led to the support of the First World War by international social
democracy. Millerand, who in the meantime had broken with the
socialists, became the French War Minister when hostilities broke
out.
The French Communist Party chose a similar path in the midst
of the social and political crisis of the 1930s. It concluded
a Popular Front alliance with the Social Democrats and the bourgeois
Radicals with the justification that this constituted an alliance
with the middle classes against fascism.
At the time Leon Trotsky warned, These men see nothing
but parliamentary shadows. They ignore the real evolution of the
masses and chase after the Radical Party which has
outlived itself and, which in the meantime, turns its back on
them ... A real alliance of the proletariat and the middle classes
is not a question of parliamentary statistics but of revolutionary
dynamics. This alliance must be created and forged in the struggle.
The whole meaning of the present political situation resides in
the fact that the despairing petty bourgeoisie is beginning to
break from the yoke of parliamentary discipline and from the tutelage
of the conservative radical clique which has always
fooled the people, and which has now definitely betrayed it. To
join in this situation with the Radicals means to condemn oneself
to the scorn of the masses, and to push the petty bourgeoisie
into the embrace of Fascism as the sole saviour.
Trotskys warning was soon confirmed. The Popular Front
government under Léon Blum suppressed the French general
strike of 1936 and isolated the Spanish revolution. This meant
the extinction of any possibility of stop the march to the Second
World War and opened the way for the emergence of the Vichy regime
under Marshal Pétain.
It is necessary to break out of the vicious circle of a policy,
which, in the name of supporting an allegedly lesser evil, simply
ignores the past and sacrifices the future. The working class
must draw the lessons from these experiences. This is the only
way to prepare for future class conflictsconflicts, which,
under conditions of rapidly growing social polarization all over
the world and growing rivalry between the major imperialist powers,
are absolutely inevitable. The only way forward lies in the building
of an new independent party of the working class on the basis
of an international, socialist perspective.
See Also:
French presidential elections:
Royal moves into the camp of Bayrou
[28 April 2007]
After first round of French
election: the contest for the centre
[26 April 2007]
French presidential election:
Sarkozy and Royal to compete in second round
[23 April 2007]
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